McChrystal Looks to Spin Afghan Civilian Deaths Problem
WASHINGTON - At his confirmation hearings two weeks ago, Gen. Stanley McChrystal said reducing civilian deaths from air strikes in Afghanistan was "strategically decisive" and declared his "willingness to operate in ways that minimise casualties or damage, even when it makes our task more difficult."
Some McChrystal supporters hope he will rein in the main source of civilian casualties: Special Operations Forces (SOF) units that carry out targeted strikes against suspected "Taliban" on the basis of doubtful intelligence and raids that require air strikes when they get into trouble.
But there are growing indications that his command is preparing to deal with the issue primarily by seeking to shift the blame to the Taliban through more and better propaganda operations and by using more high-tech drone intelligence aircraft to increase battlefield surveillance rather than by curbing the main direct cause of civilian casualties.
U.S. officials at a NATO conference in Brussels last Friday were telling reporters that "public relations" are now considered "crucial" to "turning the tide" in Afghanistan, according to an AFP story on Jun 12.
CENTCOM commander Gen. David Petraeus also referred to the importance of taking the propaganda offensive in a presentation to the pro-military think tank Centre for a New American Security (CNAS) Jun. 11. "When you're dealing the press," he said, "when you're dealing the tribal leaders, when you're dealing with host nations... you got to beat the bad guys to the headlines."
The new emphasis on more aggressive public relations appears to respond to demands from U.S. military commanders in Afghanistan to wrest control of the issue of civilian casualties from the Taliban. In a discussion of that issue at the same conference, Gen. David Barno, the commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan from 2003 to 2005, said, "We've got to be careful about who controls the narrative on civilian casualties."
U.S. military commanders in Afghanistan "see the enemy seeking to take airstrikes off the table" by exaggerating civilian casualties, Barno said. He objected to making civilian casualties an indicator of success or failure, as a CNAS paper has recommended.
The U.S. command in Afghanistan has already tried, in fact, to apply "information war" techniques in effort to control the narrative on the issue. The command has argued both that the Taliban were responsible for the massive civilians casualties in a U.S. airstrike on May 4 that killed 147 civilians, including 90 women and children, and that the number of civilian deaths claimed has been vastly exaggerated, despite detailed evidence from village residents supporting the casualty figures.
Col. Greg Julian, the command's spokesman, said in late May that a "weapon-sight" video would show that the Taliban were to blame. However, Nancy A. Youssef reported Jun. 15 in McClatchy newspapers that the video in question shows that no one had checked to see if women and children were in the building before it was bombed, according to two U.S. military officials.
The Afghan government has highlighted the problem of SOF units carrying out raids which result in airstrikes against civilian targets. Kai Eide, the chief of the United Nations mission in Afghanistan, has now publicly supported that position, saying in a video conference call from Kabul to NATO defence ministers meeting in Brussels Jun. 12 that there is an "urgent need" to review raids by SOF units, because the civilian casualties being created have been "disproportionate to the military gains".
But McChrystal hinted in his confirmation hearing that he hoped to reduce civilian casualties by obtaining more intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance aircraft. Petraeus confirmed that approach to the problem in remarks at the CNAS conference last week, announcing that he was planning to shift some high-tech intelligence vehicles from Iraq to Afghanistan.
Petraeus referred to "predators, armed full motion video with Hellfire missiles", "special intelligence birds", and unmanned intelligence vehicles called Shadows and Ravens, which fly 24 hours a day.
Although such intelligence aircraft may make U.S. battlefield targeting more precise, Petraeus's reference to drones equipped with Hellfire missiles suggests that U.S. forces in Afghanistan may now rely more than previously on drone strikes against suspected Afghan insurgents. Given the chronic lack of accurate intelligence on the identity of insurgent leaders, that would tend to increase civilian casualties.
Petraeus's past reluctance to stop or dramatically reduce such SOF operations, despite the bad publicity surrounding them, suggests that high level intra-military politics are involved.
The Marine Corps Special Operations Command (MarSOC) has been involved in the most highly publicised cases of massive civilian casualties in Afghanistan. It was established by the Marine Corps only in February 2006, and the first MarSOC company arrived in Afghanistan just a year later.
MarSOC was unable to recruit the more mature officers and troops needed for cross-cultural situations, and its recruits had only a few months of training before being sent to Afghanistan.
The unit's commanding officer had been warned by one participant in the training before the unit had arrived in Afghanistan that his troops were too young and too oriented toward killing to serve in Afghanistan, according to Chris Mason, a former U.S. official in Afghanistan familiar with the unit's history.
In March 2007, a company of MarSOC troops which had only arrived in the country the previous month were accused of firing indiscriminately at pedestrians and cars as they sped away from a suicide bomb attack, killing as many as 19 Afghan civilians. Five days later the same unit reportedly fired on traffic again.
As a result, a powerful Pashtun tribe, the Shinwari, demanded to the governor of Nangahar province and Afghan President Hamid Karzai that U.S. military operations in the province be terminated. Within a month, the 120-man MarSOC company was pulled out of Afghanistan.
Significantly, however, a new MarSOC unit was sent back to Afghanistan only a few weeks later, assigned to Herat province. Last August, a MarSOC unit launched an attack against a preplanned target in Azizabad that combined unmanned drones, attack helicopters and a Spectre gunship. More than 90 civilians were killed in the attack, including 60 children, but not a single Taliban fighter was killed in the attack, according to Afghan and U.N. officials.
Karzai said the operation had been triggered by false information given by the leader of a rival tribe, and no U.S. official contradicted him.
When Petraeus took command at CENTCOM just a few weeks later, Afghans were still seething over the Azizabad massacre. That would have been the perfect time for him to take decisive action on MarSOC's operations.
But Petraeus took no action on MarSOC. Meanwhile, other SOF units were continuing to carry out raids that did not get headlines but which regularly killed women and children, stirring more Afghan anger. Petraeus may have been confronted with the necessity of stopping all the operations if he wished to discipline MarSOC, which would have been too serious a blow to the reputation of U.S. Special Operations Forces.
For two weeks, from mid-February to early March, the rate of SOF raids was reduced. But in early March, they were resumed, despite the near certainty that there would be more embarrassing incidents involving SOF operations. The worst case of massive civilian deaths in the war would come just two months later, and involved the MarSOC unit.
Gareth Porter is an investigative historian and journalist specialising in U.S. national security policy. The paperback edition of his latest book, "Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam", was published in 2006.
Twitter
StumbleUpon
Facebook
Delicious
Digg
Newsvine
Google
Yahoo
Technorati
20 Comments so far
Show AllWhat's new? Obama hired another Cheney hack who's good at bullying when it comes to foreign policy. Obama promised to bomb Pakistan and Afghanistan and he's making sure he's got the right goons to make the public think it's necessary. And he's counting on the rising unemployment rate to generate new desperadoes and wannabe bullies. Afghanistan has always placed a curse on any nation that tries to control it. Too bad this country's too cornfed to pay attention and learn.
When foreigners came to America and killed the daughters and sons of Americans, they were the bad guys. It did not make any difference if they were doing it to destroy our economy. Bush fell into their trap. We spent billions on fighting useless wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Now we are going bankrupt and we are still trying to kill all the bad guys. But who are the bad guys, a guy could be good one day and the next day be bad. if they are bad guys because they want to kill people who kill their sons and daughters aren't we bad guys because we want to kill people, who want to kill our sons and daughters? The more sons and daughters we kill the more bad guys we create. The cycle of violence goes on forever. To Get to the bottom of the root cause of the hatred we must stop the killing.
"embarrassing incidents"
I've not noticed 0 blushing.
McChrystal runs the world's largest death squad. I think children are his specialty.
"willingness to operate in ways that minimise casualties or damage, even when it makes our task more difficult"
And...WHAT is our task?
"Embarassing incidents" to the Amerikan military; the worst possible thing that can happen in life to those Afghanis and Pakistanis whose family members, innocent men, women, and children are murdered before their eyes.
Murder is murder. Crimes against humanity are crimes against humanity. Try them and then hang them.
"If I'm curt with you, it's because time is a factor." -- Winston Wolf, "Pulp Fiction"
_________________________________
I'm not that much of a Tarantino fan, but "Clean-Up Guy" is definitely one of the hats McChrystal is wearing.
He's not there to lead The Finest Fighting Men and Women in the World into Glorious Battle to Protect Our Homeland and its Freedoms.
He's there to neutralize the crime scene and sanitize the feedback.
· Yr Obd't Servant
one old atheist I'll bet the Afghans know about the civilian deaths, and I'll bet further that they will inspire patriotic Afghans to kill the myrmidons of American power until they go away. Kudos to patriotic Afghans, who know how to fight for their freedoms as Americans have forgotten how to do.
"myrmidons of American power".
I disagree. Our soldiers are not myrmidons. Myrmidons are brave and skilled soldiers. Our soldiers are cowards. They bomb villagers to force them to give up insurgents. That is called terror. You cannot be a terrorist and "brave" at the same time.
As to the "skilled" part, put 100,000 US soldiers with everything they want except air support against 1,000 Afghan teen-agers with AK-47s. Give them 3 months in the mountains of Afghanistan or the Grand Canyon. Then, we'll be able to have a discussion on "skilled".
Our soldiers in Iraq have a choice of over a dozen desserts with their dinners, fast-food restaurants, bars and Harley-Davidson stores. When they come home, they often go on a diet to offset the weight they've gained in Iraq.
The truth is that we are a nation of cowards. We let 3 1/2 families control all our media and pimp nearly all our politicians as a result.
"There is no power greater than media control." --Adolph Hitler
ps: I suppose CD, in their sense of democracy, will exercise their right to free speech by deleting this post and blocking my username -again. Ha!
I used "mymidon" in its second sense: myrmidon A faithful follower who carries out orders without question
When I was born Hitler was in power, and then there was Russia and big brother watching, and the wars we blamed on others, and now we are the big brother watching, we are the invaders, of other countries, sending drones by remote to kill. We are now with Israel, putting pressure on yet another country to war with. Now Israel and the US are the aggressors., instead of Germany and Russia. Will we have another 9/11 to blame Iran, like was blamed on Afghanistan??
Doubtless, one of the pleasures of living in a democracy is that you can have a complex view of the leader. I find President Obama a genius on the subject of public option in health care, an idiot on Afghanistan and no child left behind, and a lawyer with the jury out on the subject of bailouts.
Whatever view one takes on these and other issues of the day, one can feel almost safe compared to life under the previous administration. On the other hand, besides his PR capability, McChrystal was chosen to lead the Afghan war for his ability as a hit man, and as such is a "human" version of our Reapers, Predators, Hellfires, Shadows and Ravens.
Perhaps another PR angle behind his choice is that it is meant to tell us dissidents to shut up. We are perhaps supposed to think, "Maybe he'll just kill innocent Afpaks rather than me-- better not say anything." But neither prospect is very nice, and once anyone decides you are a Somali pirate, you will have had it. So fear lives on in much too great a quantity, adding to the murderous atmosphere already created by the hate-filled talking heads of the extreme right.
Beyond that is terrible unrest and desperation. Unless we get quickly out of Afghanistan and seriously address our burgeoned unemployment and homelessness and our retarded education system, this time will A) go down as a horrible era in American history and B) will prove a thoroughly unpleasant period hopefully to have survived.
The US Empire is NOT a democracy. To have a democracy, you must have 100% suffrage. Every election cycle we are reminded that this is NOT a democracy by reading of the massive attempts to disenfranchise voters by purging them from voters rolls or physically keeping them from voting or by other means.
Democracy is overrated. I would feel much better if we had endless tribes all over the world, where people don't rape because they will be raped in return; they don't kill because they will be killed; they don't torture because they'll be tortured, etc.
I know...there would be no internet. I'd much rather go into my backyard and pick some tomatoes and make cheese from a cow named Moo than order pizza on the internet.
"Democracy is overrated"
shall we vote on that?
Now we need to simply spin the uncalled for deaths of innocent civilians! This country has never been for the people and never will be. The people are used to shoot and kill innocent people of other countries where the ccorporations who run the US can make a profit.
What a great country!
odoco
Google in 'Pentagon propaganda' and you will get more hits than you can read. Also, read Tim Weiner's "Legacy of Ashes - the History of the CIA' if you really want to understand how the world's greatest democracy operates.
McKhrystal indicated his "willingness to operate in ways that minimise casualties or damage." How f***ing charitable coming from a torture camp leader.
Propaganda Needed to Portray StormTroopers in Better Light
The "bad guys" in Afghanistan are the NATO forces and their "Northern Alliance" mercenaries. They would get no bad press if they weren't there.